Scale is growing by leaps and bounds, wood, glass and in between, let's
not disparage, or infer a value judgment one over the other,(not saying
you intended that as such Jim). We all have something to gain from a
shared interest in scale soaring. Take those woodies to the JR Aerotow
next weekend and show them off, it is what it's all about. Mix it up.
 Tom Augustine who died this past month will most likely have several of
his 40% wood crafted beauties at JR. in the hands of Dan Troxell, and
Mike Lance. These are on the scene in California and around the aerotow
circuit in California, and would put any wood built scale ship to shame,
likewise Eric Eiche, from British Columbia always attended the Elmira
aerotows with his truly museum scale specimens. We all tend to
compartmentalize our interests, let's not start being exclusive,
intentionally or by unintended inference.



Cheers.
JD 

Endless Mountain Models
http://www.scalesoaring.com
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jim Deck [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Saturday, May 28, 2005 10:08 PM
> To: RCSE
> Subject: [RCSE] 3 days at Woodcrafters
> 
>     Here are some
> observations:
> - Incredible scale jobs in abundance.  As these were handcrafted,
wood-
> based
> models, it wasn't a parade of "glass slippers".  ALL were aerotowed -
not
> a

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